Maxine turns down weight-loss op after ‘diet or die’ warning and loses 17½st - without surgery!

· Maxine Wren refused gastric bypass surgery in favour of joining her local Slimming World group instead.

· The 39-year-old was told by her doctor that her weight was killing her and if she didn’t slim down she wouldn’t be around in 12 months’ time.

· At her heaviest, she wore a dress size 36 but after losing 17st 7½lbs she married her husband John in a size 8/10 wedding dress.

· Maxine, from Chester-le-Street, who says the birth of her nephew was her inspiration, is now Slimming World’s Woman of the Year 2018.

A 39-year-old who turned down weight-loss surgery despite being told that she could be dead within a year if she didn’t slim down has shed 17½st by changing her diet.

Maxine Wren, from Chester-le-Street in County Durham, dropped an incredible 13 dress sizes – going from a 36 to an 8/10 – and has been named Slimming World’s Woman of the Year 2018.

After delivering the devastating news, her GP prescribed slimming pills and referred her for a gastric bypass operation. However, a month later when she discovered her sister was expecting a baby, she decided surgery was too much of a risk, declined the operation and joined her local Slimming World group instead, weighing 27st 12lbs. Since March 2013, she’s dropped to 10st 4½lbs.

Maxine says: “The slimming pills made me so poorly that I had to stop taking them. Plus, I didn’t want to die on the operating table and never meet my nephew, so I decided to join Slimming World instead and I’m so glad I did.”

She has struggled with her weight since a very young age after being born with a rare bone disease, called Blount’s disease, which affected her mobility and meant at her biggest Maxine struggled to walk without crutches. She turned to food to comfort her through the pain, and throughout her adult life she tried slimming clubs, calorie-controlled shakes and fad diets to bring her weight under control but, sadly, nothing worked. Maxine says she became resigned to the fact that she was meant to be big: “I painted a smile on my face but inside my heart was broken.”

Her size left her struggling with asthma and low energy levels, and worsened her symptoms of polycystic ovary syndrome, too. People would also stare and point in the street, which affected Maxine’s self-esteem and left her lacking the confidence to talk to new people and make friends.

On hearing her sister’s good news and realising she needed to make a change, Maxine chose Slimming World after a leaflet was posted through her letterbox. She says: “Even though I knew people who had been successful with Slimming World, I was still petrified and it took me three weeks to actually walk through the doors. I worried the other members would stare at me or that I was so big I’d break the scales. This was my last chance though and I had to do it. Everyone was really friendly so I had nothing to worry about and I lost a massive 12lbs in my first week – for the first time in my life I felt like there was light at the end of the tunnel.”

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Slimming World didn’t just save my life, it’s given me life.

Maxine Wren, Slimming World's Woman of the Year 2018

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Maxine, who is a qualified nursery nurse but unable to work due to her disability, began following Slimming World’s Food Optimising eating plan and swapped buttery toast, convenience foods and takeaways for healthy homemade meals. She says: “It’s not a diet because there’s nothing you can’t have and there’s no need to go hungry. I’ve learned how to make the healthiest choices and can even eat out if I want to. My favourite dish has to be a Slimming World-style kebab, it’s really satisfying and tastes so naughty but it’s not at all. My husband John enjoys the same meals too now.”

In August 2016 Maxine married John wearing a size 8/10 wedding dress and says the day was a dream come true: “Words can’t describe how special it was to walk down the aisle more than half the woman I was. For the first time in my life, when I look in the mirror I like how I look – and I felt like a princess on my wedding day.”

While Maxine’s disability means she can’t do much exercise, she’s more active than before and loves being able to walk and play with the young nephew who provided her the inspiration to start her journey. She says: “I hope I’m proof to people that there’s never any amount of weight you can’t lose. Everything’s changed. I don’t hide away anymore. I always say Slimming World didn’t just save my life, it’s given me life.”

FACT FILE

Name: Maxine Wren

Age: 39

Height: 5ft 3in/1.6m

Joining date: 7/03/2013

Starting weight: 27st 12lbs/390lbs/177kg

Weight loss: 17st 7½lbs/245½lbs/111½kg

Weight now: 10st 4½lbs/144½lbs/65½kg

Group: Maxine now attends the Chester-le-Street group run by Consultant Vickie Gallagher. She has previously attended the Consett group run by Dawn Ferguson and the Hartlepool group run by Janice Bryson.

Before menu:

Breakfast: 2 bowls of sugary cereal with milk, with 4 slices of white toast with peanut butter and jam

· This story is NOT for syndication to any magazines without the consent of Maxine Wren and the Slimming World press office (contact details above).

· Slimming World and Maxine Wren retain copyright of all images attached to this press release.

About Slimming World

Slimming World was founded by Margaret Miles-Bramwell (OBE, FRSA) in 1969. There are now more than 18,000 weekly groups supporting 900,000 members across the UK and Republic of Ireland. Groups are run by a network of 5,000 community-based Slimming World Consultants, who receive specific training in the role of diet and physical activity in weight management, as well as sophisticated behaviour-change techniques. Slimming World’s healthy eating plan, Food Optimising, is based on the science of satiety and energy density. Our phased activity programme, Body Magic, eases members into activity until it becomes an intrinsic part of their daily routine. The principles behind Slimming World’s philosophy are based on a deep understanding of the challenges faced by overweight people and recognition that those who struggle with weight carry a double burden, the weight itself and a burden of guilt and shame about their weight. Slimming World’s programme integrates practical, up-to-date advice with a highly developed support system based on care and compassion, and Consultant training focuses on facilitating behaviour change in a warm and friendly group environment. Consultant training is delivered through the Slimming World Academy. Slimming World also invests in a comprehensive research programme to develop its support for long-term weight management. The group support provided by Slimming World is recognised as effective by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the NHS.